While the Nazi police state was in development, the overarching German vision was a hopeful one, Moorhouse told Business Insider. "And this," he said, "is where something like Prora comes in."

Over the next three years, more than 9,000 workers erected a 2.7-mile-long building out of brick and concrete. Its practicality was dwarfed by its grandness. Moorhouse calls it "megalomania in stone."

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"The photos cannot physically do it justice," Moorhouse said. "It's too big." By all accounts, it would have been one of the most impressive structures in the world.

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But as the Third Reich began its devastating march through Europe, workers returned to their factories and Prora fell by the wayside.

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It became a shell of building, a failed Nazi dream left to decay for the next several decades ...

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... until 2013, when the German real-estate company Metropole Marketing bought the rights to refurbish Prora and build it up as luxury summer homes and a full-time apartment complex.

Metropole Marketing

The new homes will take up several of the structure's eight blocks, split between the Prora Solitaire Home and the Prora Solitaire Hotel Apartments and Spa.

Metropole Marketing

Metropole expects to finish the entire restoration by 2022, though both the apartment units and the summer homes are already for sale.

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Prora's block of apartments opened in the summer of 2016. To buy one of the units, you'll need to shell out $400,000 to $725,000.

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It all depends on how much space you'll need.

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Penthouse suites, like this one, will run on the pricier end ...

Metropole Marketing

... while more modest units will be less expensive.

Metropole Marketing

In all cases, the design aesthetic tends toward the modern.

Metropole Marketing

Regardless of size or cost, buildings will all feature glass elevators, heated floors, and laundry facilities.

Metropole Marketing

And all beach-facing units will give residents sweeping views of the Baltic Sea.

Metropole Marketing

They can also take advantage of the complex's spa and swimming pools, not to mention the extensive outdoor garden.

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While these amenities are certainly appealing, given the location's history and its distance from Berlin — about three hours by car — Moorhouse has his doubts that people will want to spend time there.

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The structure, conceived on the brink of global chaos, could end up flopping a second time, tainted by its first failed vision.

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Or it could thrive as a destination in a world where Nazi occupation continues to fade into history.